James Gray MP
James welcoming 16 Air Assault Brigade to Parliament
James Gray MP
James welcoming 16 Air Assault Brigade to Parliament
James Gray MP
James at the opening of Bassett House Care Home in Royal Wootton Bassett
James Gray MP
James Gray MP in Royal Wootton Bassett on Armistice Day
James Gray MP
James opening the Kay Thomas Centre at Castle Combe Circuit
Mr James Gray (North Wiltshire) (Conservative): The hon. Gentleman has partly answered my question. Does he accept that if prisoners are allowed to vote in local elections in places such as Wandsworth or Wormwood Scrubs, they would have a decisive number of votes in tight elections?
Tom Brake: The hon. Gentleman has helpfully answered my question, so the Minister does not need to respond to it. I presume that that is why the Government have not gone down the route of allowing prisoners to vote in local elections. However, they could exercise their local votes as electors on the register in the constituencies from which they originally came; it would not necessarily have to be in the locality of the prison.
What this argument is clearly about, and the hon. Member for Stretford and Urmston expressed it very well, is whether voting is an intrinsic right-a basic human right-or whether it is a right that should be forfeited when people lose their liberty. Of course prisoners lose their liberty; no one disputes that that is the appropriate response to a crime. However, to what extent do they lose other liberties that are associated with being a citizen? There are certain responsibilities that they retain. For example, prisoners pay capital gains tax on any capital gains transactions that they might be involved in and they pay tax on their savings. They are, therefore, making contributions that other citizens make, so to what extent do we inflict civic death on them and include withdrawing their right to vote as well as other aspects of their liberty?
Source: http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201011/cmhansrd/cm110111/halltext/110111h0001.htm#11011150000272
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